cheesesteakwithegg wrote:I read spoilers for the last 4 episodes, and the first 3 were dead on, however, they had the finale being that Quinn confesses to Dexter that he has known about him all along and that he let it go because he knew that Dexter was doing the right thing (i.e. killing bad guys). Quinn kills Saxon as revenge for Deb, and Dexter runs away with Hannah. Compared to what I read, I thought the finale was better than I expected, especially with the spoilers being dead on for the 3 preceding episodes.

I would have liked this better. I also would have liked the version of dexter on the execution table.

Masuka had one line in the finale, wtf is that? hannah sucksif he didnt need to kill anymore, what is there to protect hannah and harrison from in the new land? i'm sure there are opportunities in argentina to be a walking beef jerkey commercial.i was hoping quinn would get busted for being a filthy cop, but instead...nothingbatista ended the series in the dark about every single thing that happened from day 1.hannah suckseverything Pitts said

Kaizer wrote:Masuka had one line in the finale, wtf is that? hannah sucksif he didnt need to kill anymore, what is there to protect hannah and harrison from in the new land? i'm sure there are opportunities in argentina to be a walking beef jerkey commercial.i was hoping quinn would get busted for being a filthy cop, but instead...nothingbatista ended the series in the dark about every single thing that happened from day 1.hannah suckseverything Pitts said

Everything Kaizer said.

I defended this show for 8 years to be screwed like this. F you to all the Dexter writers.

MWB wrote:I think some of the other characters are so one dimensional that maybe the writers just figured what's the point of doing anything with them.

Well, they strung everyone along with that stupid Masuka story line all season only to never answer it. But, maybe that is your point.

Yeah, that's my point. They added these pointless plot lines and the accentuated how pointless they were by doing nothing with them in the end. Also, you basically could have taken Quinn and Batista completely out of the series and it would change nothing.

So Dexter waltzes into a hospital during a catastrophe without issue, unplugs Deb without setting off any alarms, no crash cart shows up, nothing, then he carries what is obviously a body wrapped in a sheet out the front door and through a crowd of people without a single one happening to look in his direction, then gets onto his boat and drives off into a hurricane, somehow surviving and making it all the way to canada?

This is shortly after the protective detail on Deb's room is inexplicably absent when Saxon approaches? Yet somehow Saxon need not ever even get to Deb, as a **** BLOOD CLOT is what kills her?

And all storylines surrounding Masuka, Batista, Jamie, and Quinn are completely ignored, and their entire purpose in this season was simply fluff?

And the ongoing theme of the whole series focuses on Dexter's transition from monster to human, such that he gets to a point where he no longer has a desire to kill, yet because Deb died as a result of Dexter's FORMER actions, he can no longer be with his family and has to live a life of solitude? What was the point of the character change then?

Look, i get that Breaking Bad set the bar high, but this is way beyond that. They took this show in such an awful direction and ended it so poorly that they gave the entire series a major black eye, which the show will be remembered for way more than the good seasons.

I understand Dexter wants to punish himself and save Hannah and Harrison, but why move somewhere and become a lumberjack. Isn't it possible at some point that he will change his mind and maybe want to find Hannah and Harrison. If they were going to do it this way then why not turn himself in. I would've taken more seriously his desire to punish himself for the rest of his life.

Mr. Colby wrote:So Dexter waltzes into a hospital during a catastrophe without issue, unplugs Deb without setting off any alarms, no crash cart shows up, nothing, then he carries what is obviously a body wrapped in a sheet out the front door and through a crowd of people without a single one happening to look in his direction, then gets onto his boat and drives off into a hurricane, somehow surviving and making it all the way to canada?

This is shortly after the protective detail on Deb's room is inexplicably absent when Saxon approaches? Yet somehow Saxon need not ever even get to Deb, as a **** BLOOD CLOT is what kills her?

And all storylines surrounding Masuka, Batista, Jamie, and Quinn are completely ignored, and their entire purpose in this season was simply fluff?

And the ongoing theme of the whole series focuses on Dexter's transition from monster to human, such that he gets to a point where he no longer has a desire to kill, yet because Deb died as a result of Dexter's FORMER actions, he can no longer be with his family and has to live a life of solitude? What was the point of the character change then?

Look, i get that Breaking Bad set the bar high, but this is way beyond that. They took this show in such an awful direction and ended it so poorly that they gave the entire series a major black eye, which the show will be remembered for way more than the good seasons.

this sounds like every other season

-weak secondary story lines-abandoning all realism-total cop out endings that make everything incredibly low stakes-just nothing new or interesting

dexter was never that good of a show. season 1 thrived off of a new, interesting premise and michael c hall. but the rest of the cast was terrible, and there was nothing of note going on other than dexter's plot - which involved a dance sequence to "slow ride". because that's normal. season 4 took a risk with rita's death. it was the only singular exceptional moment of the entire series. and they never did anything like that again, from what i gather. that was the biggest mistake - avoiding change and risk. it was always lather rinse repeat.

I think I've mentioned on here before, but I binge watched Dexter seasons 1-4 in about two weeks during our semester break about two years ago. I am still stunned at Rita's demise - almost the same level of revulsion as the Red Wedding in Game of Thrones - and I really think when you watch that much of a character in a short span of time, your opinion of the show is different than normal weekly viewing (and off season waiting).

I generally see a decline after season 4 for that reason, although I put Dexter's bad seasons ahead of most network programming.

It's a shame that Michael C. Hall had to compete with Cranston, Dinklage, Hamm, Kyle Chandler, and so on for Emmy Awards during Dexter's run. He is a phenomenal actor in this role and should have more trophies to show for it. I think his co-stars didn't help the cause, unfortunately.

I didn't particularly like the ending, abandoning his son to Hannah. I liked his burial of Deb, despite its implausibility. Did he plan on dying in the storm and ended up surviving? Oh well. I'll miss Dexter, regardless of the ending.

I am curious as to what direction they are going with in terms of the spin-off.

First everyone thought it was going to be about Deb (obviously can't happen unless it is a prequel)

Then everyone thought it was going to be about Zach being the next Dexter, and Dexter being his Harry

Finally, it was thought that it would be a Quinn centered spinoff, where he turns into the next Dexter (if the spoilers ended up being true and he ended up killing Saxon)

I can't imagine it being about Dexter and his new life as a lumberjack, though with how this series went, I guess that wouldn't surprise me. Though if this was the case, wouldn't they just have a season 9 of Dexter?

"Dexter's new life is symbolic and has a great meaning. According to writer Scott Reynolds' responses via Twitter, Dex lives a new life in Oregon. As for his new job as a lumberjack he's now surrounded by the sound of chain saws everyday. A chain saw was the reason it all started. And that's some kind of a self-punishment for what he did to the most important people of his life."

I know the books veer off quite a bit from the show, and I couldn't get through the first book entirely (not sure why, but it wasn't very compelling for some reason, despite being a big fan of the show) - but is there an end in sight for the books? I know there was a new book out recently called Dexter's Final Cut, but it has to do with actors interviewing Miami Dade Metro Homicide for research on a movie.